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I am very much a fan of O'Neill colonies, but have long believed they
would be much easier if they were close to a carbonaceous asteroid rather than the moon. However, it would appear that Aluminum is perhaps the ideal building material for a space colony and Nitrogen is a major part of any atmosphere. So does anyone know typical concentrations of either Aluminum or Nitrogen in near-earth asteroids? Thanks, --Larry |
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"Larry Gales" wrote in message
news:Pine.WNT.4.56.0310022026410.1980@homecomps... I am very much a fan of O'Neill colonies, but have long believed they would be much easier if they were close to a carbonaceous asteroid rather than the moon. Why? However, it would appear that Aluminum is perhaps the ideal building material for a space colony and Nitrogen is a major part of any atmosphere. So does anyone know typical concentrations of either Aluminum or Nitrogen in near-earth asteroids? Nitrogen content quite low due to the orbit - no atmosphere and no ice to keep the nitrogen frozen. As for aluminium, the concentration would probably be similar to the Moon. -- Alan Erskine alanerskine(at)optusnet.com.au Trial or release, Mr Bush, trial or release. |
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In article Pine.WNT.4.56.0310022026410.1980@homecomps,
Larry Gales wrote: ...However, it would appear that Aluminum is perhaps the ideal building material for a space colony and Nitrogen is a major part of any atmosphere. So does anyone know typical concentrations of either Aluminum or Nitrogen in near-earth asteroids? Well, nobody really knows the concentration of *anything* in near-Earth asteroids, not for sure. We have some vague optical evidence for the likely composition of the outermost micron, and for the single case of Eros we have limited gamma-ray-spectrometer data going down a meter or so. And we can analyze meteorites, but there are still major questions about their exact relationship to asteroids. That said... Aluminum is abundant in some types of rocks, but those types aren't that common in meteorites. Find the right asteroid and you'd have plenty, otherwise it's a relatively minor constituent. Getting it out is a lot of work, mind you, and very energy-intensive. Nitrogen is absent or rare in most meteorite types, except carbonaceous chondrites, which have quite significant amounts of it. -- MOST launched 1015 EDT 30 June, separated 1046, | Henry Spencer first ground-station pass 1651, all nominal! | |
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Larry Gales wrote:
I am very much a fan of O'Neill colonies, but have long believed they would be much easier if they were close to a carbonaceous asteroid rather than the moon. In more recent years, some SSI fellows have suggested that the first space habitats may get built adjacent to NEOs of the CC variety. Me, I still tend to assume they'll get built in HEO because I expect them to get built in support of a market, and I expect that market to be in cislunar space. But I could be wrong. However, it would appear that Aluminum is perhaps the ideal building material for a space colony and Nitrogen is a major part of any atmosphere. So does anyone know typical concentrations of either Aluminum or Nitrogen in near-earth asteroids? Building from asteroidal resources rather than lunar would probably push you toward a steel structure rather than aluminum. The moon is no slouch when it comes to providing nickel and iron, but some asteroids are nearly all nickel-iron. I don't think the asteroids are exactly brimming over with nitrogen, but they're certainly better sources of nitrogen than the moon. But I wouldn't worry a lot about the weight of the nitrogen. The atmosphere will occupy an impressively large volume, but it won't weigh a lot compared to the weight of the shielding, structure, and topsoil. -- Regards, Mike Combs ---------------------------------------------------------------------- We should ask, critically and with appeal to the numbers, whether the best site for a growing advancing industrial society is Earth, the Moon, Mars, some other planet, or somewhere else entirely. Surprisingly, the answer will be inescapable - the best site is "somewhere else entirely." Gerard O'Neill - "The High Frontier" |
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Larry Gales writes:
I am very much a fan of O'Neill colonies, but have long believed they would be much easier if they were close to a carbonaceous asteroid rather than the moon. However, it would appear that Aluminum is perhaps the ideal building material for a space colony and Nitrogen is a major part of any atmosphere. So does anyone know typical concentrations of either Aluminum or Nitrogen in near-earth asteroids? There is not likely to be much in the way of Nitrogen on most Near-Earth Asteroids, since the majority of nitrogen compounds tend to be rather volatile, and will have long since boiled off. You need to look at short-period comets, which have substantial nitrogen in the form of ammonia. (Caveat: A few NEAs might actually be "dead comets," but they are not likely to have that much ammonia left in them.) As for aluminum, it is a quite abundant element, and most "stony" asteroids are likely to have quite a lot of it... -- Gordon D. Pusch perl -e '$_ = \n"; s/NO\.//; s/SPAM\.//; print;' |
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![]() On Fri, 3 Oct 2003, Alan Erskine wrote: Date: Fri, 3 Oct 2003 23:27:32 +1000 From: Alan Erskine Newsgroups: sci.space.tech, sci.space.policy Subject: Aluminum and Nitrogen in asteroids "Larry Gales" wrote in message news:Pine.WNT.4.56.0310022026410.1980@homecomps... I am very much a fan of O'Neill colonies, but have long believed they would be much easier if they were close to a carbonaceous asteroid rather than the moon. Why? ------------------------------------------------ (a) Asteriods have a much more varied chemical composition than the Moon, and large amounts of water and carbon, and more Nitrogen than on the Moon (b) Flinging topsoil off an asteroid with 0.01% of earth's gravity at 5 m/s and aiming it at a target 5 km away is vastly easier than catapulting it to over 2000 m/s to a precise location over 100,000 km away (c) The asteroid requires almost no dV for landing and escape and has a huge amount of rocket fuel (steam or LH2/LOX) readily available (d) Returning PGM metals from an asteroid is far easier and much more likely to happen than building solar power satellites for an economic return ------------------------------------------------ However, it would appear that Aluminum is perhaps the ideal building material for a space colony and Nitrogen is a major part of any atmosphere. So does anyone know typical concentrations of either Aluminum or Nitrogen in near-earth asteroids? Nitrogen content quite low due to the orbit - no atmosphere and no ice to keep the nitrogen frozen. ---------------------------------- I was not thinking of free Nitrogen, but minerals or compounds with Nitrogen -- Larry -------------------------------------------- As for aluminium, the concentration would probably be similar to the Moon. ----------------------------- I think it is much less than the Moon, but how much less I don't know -------------------------------------- -- Alan Erskine alanerskine(at)optusnet.com.au Trial or release, Mr Bush, trial or release. |
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![]() Alan Erskine wrote: "Larry Gales" wrote in message news:Pine.WNT.4.56.0310022026410.1980@homecomps... I am very much a fan of O'Neill colonies, but have long believed they would be much easier if they were close to a carbonaceous asteroid rather than the moon. Why? Here is one of my arguments for near earth asteroids: http://www.clowder.net/hop/railroad/Gravitywells.jpeg Another is, being recent immigrants from the outer solar system, they are likely to be much more volatile rich than the moon. Air, water and fuel might be easier to come by. However, it would appear that Aluminum is perhaps the ideal building material for a space colony and Nitrogen is a major part of any atmosphere. So does anyone know typical concentrations of either Aluminum or Nitrogen in near-earth asteroids? Nitrogen content quite low due to the orbit - no atmosphere and no ice to keep the nitrogen frozen. As for aluminium, the concentration would probably be similar to the Moon. It's thought that a good fraction of the asteroids are former comets (One asteroid, 1979 VA, was actually seen as a comet with a tail in an earlier sighting when it was named Wilson Harrington) David Brin (he was a planetary scientist before becoming an sf writer) speculated that as a comet's surface volatiles boil off, they leave a tarry residue that is an excellent insulator protecting the remaining volatiles at the center of the once outgassing comet. 1979 VA and Nereus are two asteroids thought to be ex-comets. Perhaps there is ammonia in their interiors as well as water and some hydrocarbsons. Hop http://clowder.net/hop/index.html |
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In sci.space.policy Henry Spencer wrote:
In article Pine.WNT.4.56.0310022026410.1980@homecomps, Larry Gales wrote: ...However, it would appear that Aluminum is perhaps the ideal building material for a space colony and Nitrogen is a major part of any atmosphere. So does anyone know typical concentrations of either Aluminum or Nitrogen in near-earth asteroids? Well, nobody really knows the concentration of *anything* in near-Earth asteroids, not for sure. We have some vague optical evidence for the likely composition of the outermost micron, and for the single case of Eros we have limited gamma-ray-spectrometer data going down a meter or so. And we can analyze meteorites, but there are still major questions about their exact relationship to asteroids. Radar returns also, from one or two, which may again give information about the first little bit. -- http://inquisitor.i.am/ | | Ian Stirling. ---------------------------+-------------------------+-------------------------- "Melchett : Unhappily Blackadder, the Lord High Executioner is dead Blackadder : Oh woe! Murdered of course. Melchett : No, oddly enough no. They usually are but this one just got careless one night and signed his name on the wrong dotted line. They came for him while he slept." - Blackadder II |
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